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Röbl K, Fischer HT, Delamou A, Mbawah AK, Geurts B, Feddern L, Baldé H, Kaba I, Pozo-Martin F, Weishaar H, Menelik-Obbarius S, Burger G, Diaconu V, Dörre A, El Bcheraoui C. Caregiver acceptance of malaria vaccination for children under 5 years of age and associated factors: cross-sectional household survey, Guinea and Sierra Leone, 2022. Malar J 2023; 22:355. [PMID: 37986067 PMCID: PMC10662512 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-023-04783-0] [Citation(s) in RCA: 2] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 09/20/2023] [Accepted: 11/04/2023] [Indexed: 11/22/2023] Open
Abstract
BACKGROUND Malaria is a leading cause of death and reduced life span in Guinea and Sierra Leone, where plans for rolling out the malaria vaccine for children are being made. There is little evidence about caregiver acceptance rates to guide roll-out policies. To inform future vaccine implementation planning, this analysis aimed to assess potential malaria vaccine acceptance by caregivers and identify factors associated with acceptance in Guinea and Sierra Leone. METHODS A cross-sectional household survey using lot quality assurance sampling was conducted in three regions per country between May 2022 and August 2022. The first survey respondent in each household provided sociodemographic information. A household member responsible for childcare shared their likelihood of accepting a malaria vaccine for their children under 5 years and details about children's health. The prevalence of caregiver vaccine acceptance was calculated and associated factors were explored using multivariable logistic regression modelling calculating adjusted odds ratios (aOR) with 95% confidence intervals (CI). RESULTS Caregivers in 76% of 702 sampled households in Guinea and 81% of 575 households in Sierra Leone were accepting of a potential vaccine for their children. In both countries, acceptance was lower in remote areas than in urban areas (Guinea: aOR 0.22 [95%CI 0.09-0.50], Sierra Leone: 0.17 [0.06-0.47]). In Guinea, acceptance was lower among caregivers living in the richest households compared to the poorest households (0.10 [0.04-0.24]), among those whose children were tested for malaria when febrile (0.54 [0.34-0.85]) and in households adopting more preventative measures against malaria (0.39 [0.25-0.62]). Better knowledge of the cause of malaria infection was associated with increased acceptance (3.46 [1.01-11.87]). In Sierra Leone, vaccine acceptance was higher among caregivers living in households where the first respondent had higher levels of education as compared to lower levels (2.32 [1.05-5.11]). CONCLUSION In both countries, malaria vaccine acceptance seems promising for future vaccine roll-out programmes. Policy makers might consider regional differences, sociodemographic factors, and levels of knowledge about malaria for optimization of implementation strategies. Raising awareness about the benefits of comprehensive malaria control efforts, including vaccination and other preventive measures, requires attention in upcoming campaigns.
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Affiliation(s)
- Klara Röbl
- Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Robert Koch-Institute, Seestraße 10, 13353, Berlin, Germany
- Postgraduate Training for Applied Epidemiology (PAE), Robert Koch-Institute, Seestraße 10, 13353, Berlin, Germany
- ECDC Fellowship Programme, Field Epidemiology Path (EPIET), European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC), Gustav III:S Boulevard 40, 16973, Solna, Sweden
| | - Hanna-Tina Fischer
- Evidence-Based Public Health, Centre for International Health Protection, Robert Koch-Institute, Nordufer 20, 13353, Berlin, Germany
- Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Charitéplatz 1, 10117, Berlin, Germany
| | - Alexandre Delamou
- Centre d'Excellence Africain pour la Prévention et le Contrôle des Maladies Transmissibles (CEA-PCMT), Université Gamal Abdel Nasser de Conakry (UGANC), Dixinn, PoBox 1017, Conakry, Guinea
- Faculté des sciences techniques de la santé (FSTS), Université Gamal Abdel Nasser de Conakry (UGANC), Conakry, Guinea
| | - Abdul Karim Mbawah
- College of Medicine and Allied Health Sciences (COMAHS), University of Sierra Leone, Connaught Hospital, Freetown, Sierra Leone
| | - Brogan Geurts
- Evidence-Based Public Health, Centre for International Health Protection, Robert Koch-Institute, Nordufer 20, 13353, Berlin, Germany
| | - Lukas Feddern
- Evidence-Based Public Health, Centre for International Health Protection, Robert Koch-Institute, Nordufer 20, 13353, Berlin, Germany
| | - Habibata Baldé
- Centre d'Excellence Africain pour la Prévention et le Contrôle des Maladies Transmissibles (CEA-PCMT), Université Gamal Abdel Nasser de Conakry (UGANC), Dixinn, PoBox 1017, Conakry, Guinea
- Faculté des sciences techniques de la santé (FSTS), Université Gamal Abdel Nasser de Conakry (UGANC), Conakry, Guinea
| | - Ibrahima Kaba
- Centre d'Excellence Africain pour la Prévention et le Contrôle des Maladies Transmissibles (CEA-PCMT), Université Gamal Abdel Nasser de Conakry (UGANC), Dixinn, PoBox 1017, Conakry, Guinea
- Faculté des sciences techniques de la santé (FSTS), Université Gamal Abdel Nasser de Conakry (UGANC), Conakry, Guinea
| | - Francisco Pozo-Martin
- Evidence-Based Public Health, Centre for International Health Protection, Robert Koch-Institute, Nordufer 20, 13353, Berlin, Germany
| | - Heide Weishaar
- Evidence-Based Public Health, Centre for International Health Protection, Robert Koch-Institute, Nordufer 20, 13353, Berlin, Germany
| | - Sara Menelik-Obbarius
- Evidence-Based Public Health, Centre for International Health Protection, Robert Koch-Institute, Nordufer 20, 13353, Berlin, Germany
| | - Gerrit Burger
- Evidence-Based Public Health, Centre for International Health Protection, Robert Koch-Institute, Nordufer 20, 13353, Berlin, Germany
| | - Viorela Diaconu
- Evidence-Based Public Health, Centre for International Health Protection, Robert Koch-Institute, Nordufer 20, 13353, Berlin, Germany
| | - Achim Dörre
- Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Robert Koch-Institute, Seestraße 10, 13353, Berlin, Germany
| | - Charbel El Bcheraoui
- Evidence-Based Public Health, Centre for International Health Protection, Robert Koch-Institute, Nordufer 20, 13353, Berlin, Germany.
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Cardona-Arias JA, Higuita-Gutiérrez LF, Carmona-Fonseca J. Social determination of malaria in pregnancy in Colombia: a critical ethnographic study. Malar J 2023; 22:299. [PMID: 37803372 PMCID: PMC10557150 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-023-04734-9] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 04/25/2023] [Accepted: 09/29/2023] [Indexed: 10/08/2023] Open
Abstract
BACKGROUND The meanings and experiences related to malaria in pregnancy (MiP) and its processes of social determination of health (PSDH) have not been reported in the world scientific literature. The objective was to understand the meanings and experiences of MiP, and to explain their PSDH in an endemic area from Colombia, 2022. METHODS Critical ethnography with 46 pregnant women and 31 healthcare workers. In-depth and semi-structured interviews, focus group discussions, participant and non-participant observations, and field diaries were applied. A phenomenological-hermeneutic analysis, saturation and triangulation was carried out. The methodological rigor criteria were reflexivity, credibility, auditability, and transferability. RESULTS At the singular level, participants indicated different problems in antenatal care and malaria control programmes, pregnant women were lacking knowledge about MiP, and malaria care was restricted to cases with high obstetric risk. Three additional levels that explain the PSDH of MiP were identified: (i) limitations of malaria control policies, and health-system, geographic, cultural and economic barriers by MiP diagnosis and treatment; (ii) problems of public health programmes and antenatal care; (iii) structural problems such as monetary poverty, scarcity of resources for public health and inefficiency in their use, lacking community commitment to preventive actions, and breach of institutional responsibilities of health promoter entity, municipalities and health services provider institutions. CONCLUSION Initiatives for MiP control are concentrated at the singular level, PDSH identified in this research show the need to broaden the field of action, increase health resources, and improve public health programmes and antenatal care. It is also necessary to impact the reciprocal relationships of MiP with economic and cultural dimensions, although these aspects are increasingly diminished with the predominance and naturalization of neoliberal logic in health.
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Cardona-Arias JA, Salas-Zapata W, Carmona-Fonseca J. A systematic review of mixed studies on malaria in Colombia 1980-2022: what the "bifocal vision" discovers. BMC Public Health 2023; 23:1169. [PMID: 37330477 PMCID: PMC10276438 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-023-16098-5] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 07/29/2022] [Accepted: 06/10/2023] [Indexed: 06/19/2023] Open
Abstract
Mixed methods are essential in public health research and malaria control, because they allow grasping part of the complexity and diversity of the factors that determine health-disease. This study analyzes the mixed studies on malaria in Colombia, 1980-2022, through a systematic review in 15 databases and institutional repositories. The methodological quality was assessed with Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool (MMAT), STrengthening the Reporting of OBservational studies in Epidemiology (STROBE), and Standards for Reporting Qualitative Research (SRQR). The qualitative and quantitative findings were grouped into a four-level hierarchical matrix. The epidemiological profile of malaria morbidity, from traditional epidemiology, has been sustained by environmental problems, armed conflict, individual risk behaviors, and low adherence to recommendations from health institutions. However, the qualitative component reveals deeper causes that are less studied, of greater theoretical complexity, and that reflect challenges to design and implement health interventions, such as socioeconomic and political crises, poverty, and the neoliberal orientation in the malaria control policy; the latter reflected in the change in the role of the State, the fragmentation of control actions, the predominance of insurance over social assistance, the privatization of the provision of health services, the individualistic and economistic predominance of health, and low connection with popular tradition and community initiatives. The above confirms the importance of expanding mixed studies as a source of evidence to improve malaria research and control models in Colombia, and to identify the underlying causes of the epidemiological profile.
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Affiliation(s)
| | | | - Jaime Carmona-Fonseca
- Research group "Salud y Comunidad César Uribe Piedrahíta" School of Medicine, University of Antioquia, Medellín, Colombia
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Tapias-Rivera J, Gutiérrez JD. Environmental and socio-economic determinants of the occurrence of malaria clusters in Colombia. Acta Trop 2023; 241:106892. [PMID: 36935051 DOI: 10.1016/j.actatropica.2023.106892] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 08/10/2022] [Revised: 03/06/2023] [Accepted: 03/08/2023] [Indexed: 03/19/2023]
Abstract
This study identifies the environmental and socio-economic determinants of clusters of high malaria incidence in Colombia during the period of 2008-2019. The malaria cases were obtained from the National System of Surveillance in Public Health, with 798,897 cases reported in the 986 Colombian municipalities evaluated during the study period. Spatial autocorrelation of incidence was examined with global and local indices. Clusters were identified in the Amazon, Pacific, and Uraba-Bajo Cauca-Alto Sinú regions. The factors associated with a municipality belonging to a high-incidence cluster were identified using a logistic regression model with mixed effects and showed a positive association for the variables (forest coverage and minimum multi-year average rainfall). An inverse relationship was observed for aqueduct coverage and the odds of belonging to a cluster. A 1% increase in forest coverage was associated with a 4.2% increase in the odds of belonging to a malaria cluster. The association with minimum multi-year average rainfall was positive (OR = 1.0011; 95% CI 1.0005-1.0027). A 1% increase in aqueduct coverage was associated with a 4.3% decrease in the odds of belonging to malaria cluster. The identification of malaria cluster determinants in Colombia could help guide surveillance and disease control policies.
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Affiliation(s)
- Johanna Tapias-Rivera
- Universidad de Santander, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas, Naturales y Agropecuarias, Bucaramanga, Santander, Colombia.
| | - Juan David Gutiérrez
- Universidad de Santander, Facultad de Ingenierías y Tecnologías, Bucaramanga, Instituto Xerira, Santander, Colombia
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Frequency of gestational malaria and maternal-neonatal outcomes, in Northwestern Colombia 2009-2020. Sci Rep 2022; 12:10944. [PMID: 35768619 PMCID: PMC9243123 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-15011-1] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 09/28/2021] [Accepted: 06/16/2022] [Indexed: 11/17/2022] Open
Abstract
Research on Gestational Malaria (GM) is scarce in America's. In the few available studies in Colombia, the analysis of immunological or parasitological aspects predominates, with few analyzes of epidemiological aspects. The objectives were to determine the frequency of GM and submicroscopic infections (positive with PCR and negative with thick blood smears), to identify obstetric and malaria history associated with GM, and to describe maternal and neonatal outcomes associated with GM, in northwestern Colombia. A retrospective study with records of 825 pregnant women was conducted. qPCR and thick blood smear were performed. Frequencies were determined with 95% confidence intervals. Comparisons were made with the Chi-square test, Mann–Whitney U test, and prevalence ratios adjusted in a log-binomial model. The frequency of GM was 35.8% (95% CI 32.4–39.1) of submicroscopic infection was 16.2% (95% CI 13.7–18.8). According to the multivariable model, the subgroups with the highest frequency of GM were pregnant women without healthcare coverage (32.3%), in the third trimester of pregnancy (30.5%), nulliparous (35.6%), and with a previous diagnosis of malaria in the current pregnancy (64.0%). GM was associated with more frequency of gestational anemia, infection in neonates, and lower birth weight. The results indicate in a precise and direct way that malaria control in this northwestern region of Colombia is far from adequate, which is even more serious considering the affectations for the mother and the neonate.
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Cardona-Arias JA, Salas-Zapata W, Carmona-Fonseca J. Systematic review of qualitative studies about malaria in Colombia. Heliyon 2020; 6:e03964. [PMID: 32885059 PMCID: PMC7452435 DOI: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2020.e03964] [Citation(s) in RCA: 1] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 03/06/2019] [Revised: 04/28/2020] [Accepted: 05/06/2020] [Indexed: 11/26/2022] Open
Abstract
Introduction The research about malaria in Colombia has centered mainly on the biomedical (clinical, parasitological, epidemiological and entomological) field, with little focus on qualitative research. Purpose Analyzing social categories related to malaria in Colombia, based on qualitative studies published among scientific literature. Methods Systematic review following Cochrane and PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis) recommendations. An ex-ante protocol was applied, comprehensive and reproducible for the search, screening, and extraction of information. Methodological quality was evaluated through SRQR (Standards for Reporting Qualitative Research). Results 10 studies complied with the protocol; these studies interviewed 500 infected or exposed subjects, program administrators, health professionals, and indigenous people. 40 categories were identified, which account for social-economical, cultural and ecological determiners of malaria; insights and ways to understand the disease at an individual level; malaria consequences, and medical attention, disease control and elimination actions. Conclusion A wide variety of populations and subjects was considered. They show similar qualitative evidence on structural determiners, family-individual effects, and ways to understand malaria. Motivations to participate in disease interventions are less known, and they constitute the central axis for subsequent studies aimed to improve community engagement in disease control and elimination initiatives.
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Affiliation(s)
| | - Walter Salas-Zapata
- Research Group on Health and Sustainability, School of Microbiology, University of Antioquia, Colombia
| | - Jaime Carmona-Fonseca
- Coordinator of the Research Group on Health and Community César Uribe Piedrahíta, University of Antioquia, Colombia
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